The Sun (Lowell)

Duggan retires from hockey

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she turned her attention to the Olympic gold medal that had eluded the U.S. since 1998.

At an event in the fall of 2017 at Nike’s campus in Beaverton, Oregon, Duggan took copious notes when Hockey Hall of Famer and ’98 gold medalist Cammi Granato was addressing the team. Duggan and Granato had countless conversati­ons that year about getting a more equitable contract and trying to win at the Olympics.

“The gist of it was, ‘How do we win this gold medal?’” Granato said. “Like, ‘We are not going to this Olympics and coming away without a gold — how do we do it?’”

Duggan recorded 75 points (45 goals, 30 assists) in 137 games in a U.S. uniform and helped transform the culture after a gutwrenchi­ng overtime loss to Canada in the gold-medal game at the 2014 Sochi Games.

“I think that span from 2014 to 2018 was probably the most crucial years for our program,” longtime teammate and friend Kacey Bellamy said. “Meghan had such a hand in the way she led our team and the change in culture that we had to do in order to be successful, and that’s one of the main reasons why we won gold in 2018.”

Duggan was a founding member of the Profession­al Women’s Hockey Players Associatio­n in 2019. The aim was to establish one sustainabl­e pro league. She could continue playing a crucial role in fighting for more prominence for her sport.

“She’ll continue to be a part of that, obviously not as a player, but I think in other ways,” said Hockey Hall of Famer Jayna Hefford, who played against Duggan with Canada and now works as an executive with the PWHPA. “We’re lucky to have her as a voice.”

Duggan put up 238 points in 159 games over four seasons while winning three national championsh­ips at the University of Wisconsin. She had 19 points in 26 games over four in the Canadian Women’s Hockey League and 36 more during two in the National Women’s Hockey League.

“It goes just to her work ethic on the ice — hardest worker I know,” said Brianna Decker, who played with Duggan in college, the CWHL, NWHL and on the national team. “She always led by example on the ice but off the ice, too, every little detail of the game.”

Because of her accomplish­ments from the boardroom to the locker room and on the ice, Duggan will likely soon be a part of at least the U.S. Hockey and Internatio­nal Ice Hockey Federation Halls of Fame. She won’t have to wait long.

“Not many athletes get to end their career on top,” teammate Kendall Coyne Schofield said. “Whatever the criteria is for the the waiting period, she’ll be there. So give it the grace period and we’ll definitely see her in those Hall of Fames.”

 ?? AP FILE PHOTOS ?? Meghan Duggan and Russia’s Yekaterina Nikolayeva chase the puck during a preliminar­y game at the 2018 Olympics. Below, Duggan looks up during a faceoff in the semifinal game against Sweden during the 2014 Olympics in Sochi, Russia.
AP FILE PHOTOS Meghan Duggan and Russia’s Yekaterina Nikolayeva chase the puck during a preliminar­y game at the 2018 Olympics. Below, Duggan looks up during a faceoff in the semifinal game against Sweden during the 2014 Olympics in Sochi, Russia.
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